— We hear a warm voice reading the Liminal Beings curatorial statement, which is featured below. —

When we are neither here nor there, we are in the ambiguity of liminal space. Liminality is a window between presence and absence, past and future, visible and unseen, call and response. Changes have come thick and fast over the past year, drastically shifting perspectives, routines and social roles. Physical isolation has closed many doors and connections, while virtual communities have created and opened up others. Our self-awareness and collective conscience hangs in between expansion and contraction. How do we navigate the threshold between what falls away and what we move towards?

Liminal Beings is a virtual exhibition created by participants in the Socially Distant Artist Residency program, which began in response to the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic and the associated social distancing practices. The exhibition is an extension of work in which we investigate introspection, loneliness, solitude, social (dis)connection experienced by the Artists in Residence during this time. 

As we create new meaning, while moving among a variety of artistic modes, we examine how ideas, behaviors, and expressions evolve. Multiple ways of engagement with the artwork can open new layers of insight and even uncertainty. Critical to our exploration is presenting the artwork accessibly. With a focus on components such as image descriptions, captioning/subtitles, and alt text, we aim to make the exhibition as robustly accessible as possible. These elements are integral parts of both the artwork and the exhibit as a whole, as these are not merely add-ons, but a thoughtful part of the exhibition’s curatorial foundation.

 
 

To enter the exhibition, please select one of the links listed after the curatorial statement. This will determine which artwork you view first. You can continue to use links at the bottom of each page to choose your path through the space. (These are words or phrases pulled from the artist’s image descriptions and artwork statements.)

If you would like to view a larger version of an artwork, click any links the begin with “Close up of…” followed by the artwork’s title.

 

Above is an exhibition anteroom. On this page (as well as the “lobbies” within the exhibition) the artworks are framed by two photographs - the top of a ornate gold frame casting overlapping shadows of purple and blue on a crisp white wall, and at the bottom of the page, the same image flipped upside down, creating the appearance of the bottom of a ornate gold frame also casting overlapping shadows.